In Art and Wax: The Morphine Addict in France at the Turn of the Twentieth Century

Q2 Arts and Humanities
Hannah Halliwell
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Wax models showing scarred skin caused by repeated use of hypodermic syringes were formed from the bodies of hospital patients with morphine addictions in France at the turn of the twentieth century. Needle-scarred skin was deemed a key factor in identifying morphinomanie (morphine mania). Wax modelers attempted to recreate morphine users’ bodies as accurately as possible because these objects functioned diagnostically. Artists repudiated the skin’s appearance and depicted the morphine addict as female, even though men made up the majority of users. In art, the female body is typically enclosed by an idealized, unscarred skin. As such, in line with broader concerns about containing femininity in art and in actuality, artists avoided showing the broken boundary of the morphine addict’s skin, pierced by hypodermic needle. Although medical and artistic visual culture of the morphine addict differ visually, both are subjective and function to contain and control concurrent narratives on addiction.
艺术与蜡:二十世纪之交法国的吗啡成瘾者
二十世纪之交的法国,用吗啡成瘾的医院病人的尸体制成了蜡像,蜡像上的皮肤因反复使用皮下注射器而留下疤痕。针痕皮肤被认为是识别吗啡狂躁症的关键因素。蜡模型师试图尽可能准确地重建吗啡使用者的身体,因为这些物体具有诊断功能。艺术家们拒绝接受皮肤的外观,并将吗啡成瘾者描绘成女性,尽管男性占大多数使用者。在艺术中,女性的身体通常被理想化的、没有疤痕的皮肤包裹着。因此,出于对在艺术和现实中包含女性气质的更广泛关注,艺术家们避免展示吗啡成瘾者被皮下注射针头刺穿的皮肤的破碎边界。吗啡成瘾者的医学视觉文化和艺术视觉文化虽然在视觉上有所不同,但都是主观的,都具有包含和控制成瘾并发叙事的功能。
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来源期刊
The social history of alcohol and drugs
The social history of alcohol and drugs Arts and Humanities-History
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
18
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